Transformers: The Last Knight

Transformers: The Last Knight (2017)

1 corrected entry

(4 votes)

Corrected entry: When Sir Edmund Burton is talking to Cade, he spots a picture from World War 2, mentioning that the bot "looks like Bumblebee." Burton then 'confirms' that it was Bumblebee. This can't be possible as Bumblebee didn't arrive on Earth, according to the Bumblebee movie, until the 80's and WW2 was finished by 1945.

koalakalla

Correction: The Bumblebee movie is a reboot of the franchise. It maintains some elements of the old films, but begins a new continuity.

Correction: The Bumblebee movie is NOT a reboot-and even if it was, this movie came out before they started trying to convince us it was a reboot. The more likely explanation for this is that Bumblebee had left Earth after World War II, then came back in the 1980s, as he does in Bumblebee.

It's not a full reboot, but it is a soft reboot, so in part that does matter.

Quantom X

Continuity mistake: When Bumblebee is driving through London there are suddenly a couple of shots from some American town, you can tell from the different street name sign styles. (01:28:35)

More mistakes in Transformers: The Last Knight

Daytrader: You always resort to violence!
Hound: I love violence.

More quotes from Transformers: The Last Knight

Trivia: The previous two "Transformers" films both earned over $1 billion worldwide at the box office, and this fifth film was considered such a guaranteed hit, nearly a dozen more films set in the "Transformers" universe were planned before its release. However, the movie ended up bringing in the lowest grosses of the entire series, and has as of July 18, 2017, only brought in just over $500 million worldwide- only half of what the previous two films earned.

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Question: Is this movie supposed to have floating mattes? This is killing me! It's constantly shifting aspect ratios throughout the entire movie.

Answer: The constantly shifting aspect ratios are due to the fact that Michael Bay shot the film with several different camera types. Most directors who use multiple types of camera find a way to hide the shifts a little better, but Bay appears to have been unconcerned with this issue. There are several scenes where the aspect ratio changes from shot to shot. The aspect ratio shifts were also present in the theatrical release, and were a major source of ridicule then, but they are arguably more noticeable on a smaller screen.

BaconIsMyBFF

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